GAMA: towards a physical understanding of galaxy formation

Astronomy and Geophysics 50 (2009) 5

Authors:

SP Driver, P Norberg, IK Baldry, SP Bamford, AM Hopkins, J Liske, J Loveday, JA Peacock, DT Hill, LS Kelvin, ASG Robotham, NJG Cross, HR Parkinson, M Prescott, CJ Conselice, L Dunne, S Brough, H Jones, RG Sharp, E van Kampen, S Oliver, IG Roseboom, J Bland-Hawthorn, SM Croom, S Ellis, E Cameron, S Cole, CS Frenk, WJ Couch, AW Graham, R Proctor, R De Propris, IF Doyle, EM Edmondson, RC Nichol, D Thomas, SA Eales, MJ Jarvis, K Kuijken, O Lahav, BF Madore, M Seibert, MJ Meyer, L Staveley-Smith, S Phillipps, CC Popescu, AE Sansom, WJ Sutherland, RJ Tuffs, SJ Warren

Refined orbital solution and quiescent variability in the black hole transient GS 1354-64 (= BW Cir)

Astrophysical Journal, Supplement Series 181:1 (2009) 238-243

Authors:

J Casares, JA Orosz, C Zurita, T Shahbaz, JM Corral-Santana, JE Mcclintock, MR Garcia, IG Martínez-Pais, PA Charles, RP Fender, RA Remillard

Abstract:

In Casares et al. we presented the first radial velocity curve of the companion star to BW Cir which demonstrates the presence of a black hole in this historical X-ray transient. But these data were affected by aliasing and two possible periods at 2.5445 days and 2.5635 days were equally possible. Here we present new spectroscopic data that enable us to break the 1-year aliasing and confirm 2.5445 days as the correct orbital period. We also present R-band photometry over 14 years, which reveals the presence of important flaring activity dominating the light curves. © 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Wide-field 1-2 GHz research on galaxy evolution – synergies with multi-wavelength surveys

ArXiv e-prints (2009)

A new perspective on GCRT J1745-3009

Astronomy and Astrophysics 502:2 (2009) 549-558

Authors:

H Spieeuw, B Scheers, R Braun, RAMJ Wijers, JCA Miller-Jones, BW Stappers, RP Fender

Abstract:

Context. Reports on a transient source about 1.25° south of the Galactic Centre motivated these follow-up observations with the WSRT and the reinvestigation of archival VLA data. The source GCRT J1745-3009 was detected during a 2002 Galactic Centre monitoring programme with the VLA at 92 cm by five powerful 10-min bursts with a 77-min recurrence while apparently lacking any interburst emission. Aims. The WSRT observations were performed and archival VLA data reduced to detect GCRT J1745-3009 again at different epochs and frequencies, to constrain its distance, and to determine its nature. We attempted to extract a more accurate lightcurve from the discovery dataset of GCRT J1745-3009 to rule out some of the models that have been suggested. We also investigated the transient behaviour of a nearby source. Methods. The WSRT data were taken in the "maxi-short" configuration, using 10 s integrations, on 2005 March 24 at 92 cm and on 2005 May 14/15 at 21 cm. Five of the six VLA observations we reduced are the oldest of this field in this band. Results. GCRT J1745-3009 was not redetected. With the WSRT we reached an rms sensitivity of 0.21 mJy beam-1 at 21 cm and 3.7 mJy beam-1 at 92 cm. Reanalysis of the discovery observation data resulted in a more accurate and more complete lightcurve. The five bursts appear to have the same shape: a steep rise, a more gradual brightening, and a steep decay. We found variations in burst duration of order =3% We improved the accuracy of the recurrence period of the bursts by an order of magnitude: 77.012 ± 0.021 min. We found no evidence of aperiodicity. We derived a very steep spectral index: a = -6.5 ± 3.4. We improved the 5er upper limits for interburst emission and fractional circular polarisation to 31 mJy beam-1 and 8%, respectively. Any transient behaviour of a nearby source could not be established. Conclusions. Models that predict symmetric bursts can be ruled out, but rotating systems are favoured, because their periodicity is precise. Scattering constraints imply that GCRT J1745-3009 cannot be located far beyond the GC. If this source is an incoherent emitter and not moving at a relativistic velocity, it must be closer than 14 pc. © ESO 2009.

Stellar populations of early-type galaxies in the ATLAS3D sample

AIP Conference Proceedings 1111 (2009) 111-114

Authors:

P Serra, RM McDermid, K Alatalo, L Blitz, M Bois, F Bournaud, M Bureau, M Cappellari, RL Davies, TA Davis, PT De Zeeuw, E Emsellem, J Falcón-Barroso, S Khochfar, D Krajnović, H Kuntschner, PY Lablanche, R Morganti, T Naab, M Sarzi, N Scott, RCE Van Den Bosch, G Van De Ven, A Weijmans, LM Young

Abstract:

ATLAS3D is a multi-wavelength, volume-limited survey of 263 morphologicallyselected early-type galaxies within a distance of 42 Mpc and complete to MK ≤ -21.5. Here we present the ATLAS3D project and our first results on the stellar populations of galaxies in the ATLAS3Dsample based on SAURON integral-field spectroscopy. We show relations between integrated line-strength indices and stellar velocity dispersion o in the range 55 ≤ Σ(km/s) ≤ 350. We derive simple-stellar-population-equivalent age, metallicity and α/Fe abundance ratio and discuss their relation to stellar velocity dispersion, environment and galaxy internal kinematics. These preliminary results indicate that slow rotators tend to be older and have less variation in age than fast rotators. We also find that galaxies in lower density environments are on average younger than those in denser environments, as found by other authors. © 2009 American Institute of Physics.